HRA Calculator
House Rent Allowance Tax Exemption Calculator
Total Tax Saving
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📊 Your HRA Exemption Breakdown
Metro cities (Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai) get 50% exemption rate. Non-metro cities get 40%. This affects your tax exemption calculation.
Your basic monthly salary. HRA exemption is calculated based on Basic + DA, not gross salary.
DA component added to basic salary for HRA calculation. If you don’t get DA, enter 0.
Combined Basic + DA. This is the base amount used in all three HRA exemption formulas.
Monthly HRA amount paid by your employer. Check your salary slip for this component.
Monthly rent you actually pay to landlord. Keep rent receipts as proof for tax filing.
Formula component: 10% of (Basic + DA). Used to calculate excess rent paid for HRA exemption.
Full HRA amount received. This is the first condition – you can’t claim more than what you receive.
Actual rent paid minus 10% of (Basic + DA). This represents excess rent qualifying for exemption.
50% of (Basic + DA) for metro, 40% for non-metro. This is the city-based maximum exemption limit.
Tax law takes MINIMUM of all three calculations. This is your actual tax-exempt HRA amount.
HRA Received – HRA Exemption. This portion gets added to your taxable income.
Monthly exemption × 12. Total tax-exempt HRA for the entire financial year.
Yearly taxable HRA amount. This gets added to your annual income for tax calculation.
Estimated annual tax saving if you’re in 30% tax bracket. Actual savings depend on your tax slab (0%, 5%, 20%, 30%).
What % of received HRA is tax-exempt. Higher is better – means you’re maximizing the HRA benefit.
💡 HRA Tax Exemption – Complete Guide
What is HRA? House Rent Allowance is a component of salary given by employers to help employees with rent expenses. Part of HRA is tax-exempt under Section 10(13A) of Income Tax Act.
Who Can Claim HRA Exemption?
- ✅ Salaried employees receiving HRA as part of salary
- ✅ Living in rented accommodation (not own house)
- ✅ Actually paying rent to landlord
- ❌ Cannot claim if living in own house
- ❌ Self-employed individuals can’t claim HRA (but can claim under Section 80GG)
The 3-Step HRA Exemption Formula:
Tax-exempt HRA = MINIMUM of these 3 amounts:
- Method 1: Actual HRA received from employer
- Method 2: Actual rent paid – 10% of (Basic + DA)
- Method 3: 50% of (Basic + DA) for metro cities OR 40% for non-metro
Metro vs Non-Metro Cities:
- Metro (50% limit): Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai
- Non-Metro (40% limit): All other cities – Bangalore, Hyderabad, Pune, Ahmedabad, etc.
Important Documents Needed:
- • Rent receipts from landlord (mandatory if rent > ₹1L/year)
- • Landlord’s PAN (if annual rent > ₹1 lakh)
- • Rental agreement copy (recommended)
- • Rent payment proof (bank statements/online transfers)
Pro Tips to Maximize HRA Benefit:
- ✅ Pay higher rent to increase exemption (within reasonable limits)
- ✅ If staying with parents, pay them rent and claim HRA (keep proper documentation)
- ✅ Ensure rent paid > 10% of (Basic + DA) to get benefit
- ✅ In metro cities, try to negotiate higher HRA component in salary
- ✅ Submit rent receipts to employer for correct TDS deduction
Common Mistakes to Avoid:
- ❌ Claiming HRA while living in own house
- ❌ Fake rent receipts – can lead to penalties
- ❌ Not providing landlord’s PAN when rent > ₹1L/year
- ❌ Claiming HRA if employer already deducted at source
Tax Slabs & Actual Savings: If exempt HRA is ₹2L/year, actual tax saved = ₹2L × your tax rate. If you’re in 30% bracket = ₹60,000 saved. In 20% bracket = ₹40,000 saved. In 5% bracket = ₹10,000 saved.
🏠 HRA Calculator —
Master House Rent & Save Tax
Living on rent? Your company gives you an allowance for it, but the government limits how much tax you can save. Let’s decode the 3 Golden Rules of HRA in simple English so you don’t lose money to taxes.
What is HRA (House Rent Allowance)?
When a company hires you, they know you need a place to live. So, instead of just giving you a single block of salary, they break it down. One of those pieces is called House Rent Allowance (HRA).
The Income Tax Department is actually kind to people living on rent. Under Section 10(13A) of the Income Tax Act, they say: “If you are getting HRA from your company, and you are actually paying rent to a landlord, we won’t charge tax on that HRA amount.”
But there is a catch! The government won’t just blindly make your entire HRA tax-free. They use a specific formula to calculate a limit. Whatever is lower according to their formula becomes tax-free. The rest of the HRA becomes taxable.
Many employees think: “My company gives me ₹20,000 as HRA, and I pay ₹20,000 as rent, so my entire HRA is tax-free, right?” WRONG! Tax saving depends entirely on your ‘Basic Salary’ and the city you live in. You must use a calculator to find the exact exemption.
The 3 Golden Rules of HRA Calculation
The calculator uses these 3 exact rules. The government calculates these three amounts, and whichever amount is the SMALLEST (Minimum), becomes your Tax-Free HRA.
Rule 1: Actual HRA Received
This is simply the amount written as “HRA” on your monthly payslip. If your company gives you ₹15,000/month, the yearly amount is ₹1.8 Lakhs.
Rule 2: The City Limit (50% or 40% of Basic)
If you live in a Metro city (Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai), the limit is 50% of your Basic Salary. If you live anywhere else (Bangalore, Pune, Hyderabad, etc.), the limit is 40% of your Basic Salary.
Rule 3: Actual Rent Paid MINUS 10% of Basic
This rule confuses everyone. It simply means: The government expects you to bear at least 10% of your basic salary as rent from your own pocket. They only give you tax relief on whatever rent you pay above that 10% mark.
For general geography, yes. But for Income Tax purposes, NO! The Income Tax department only recognizes Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, and Chennai as Metro cities (50% limit). IT hubs like Bangalore, Hyderabad, Pune, and Gurgaon are considered Non-Metro (40% limit) for HRA calculation.
Let’s Do The Math (Real Example)
Meet Rahul. He lives in Bangalore (Non-Metro) and his company pays him well. Let’s see how much tax exemption Rahul actually gets compared to what he expects.
- Rahul’s Basic Salary: ₹50,000 / month
- HRA given by company: ₹20,000 / month
- Actual Rent Rahul pays: ₹18,000 / month
| The 3 Rules | Calculation | Amount (Monthly) |
|---|---|---|
| Rule 1: Actual HRA Received | Look at Payslip | ₹20,000 |
| Rule 2: 40% of Basic (Bangalore) | 40% of ₹50,000 | ₹20,000 |
| Rule 3: Rent Paid minus 10% Basic | ₹18,000 – (10% of 50k = ₹5,000) | ₹13,000 (Smallest!) |
Even though Rahul receives ₹20,000 as HRA, and he pays ₹18,000 as rent, his tax-free HRA is only ₹13,000 (because it is the smallest of the three numbers). The remaining ₹7,000 (20k – 13k) will be added to his taxable income and he will have to pay tax on it. This is why you must use the calculator!
Documents & Checklists for HRA
HRA and The New Tax Regime (Budget Warning)
The government introduced the “New Tax Regime” which offers lower tax rates, but takes away all your deductions. If you select the New Tax Regime in your company portal, your HRA exemption becomes ZERO. Even if you pay ₹30,000 rent, your entire HRA will be taxed. You can only claim HRA tax benefits if you opt for the Old Tax Regime. Calculate your taxes carefully before making this choice in April!
Frequently Asked Questions
🏠 Don’t guess your taxes.
Use the HRA Calculator above to input your Basic Salary and Rent to find exactly how much tax you can save legally this year.
* The HRA calculation rules are based on Section 10(13A) of the Income Tax Act, 1961. The exemption is only applicable under the Old Tax Regime. Tax laws are subject to amendments in the Union Budget. Unity Wealth Capital is an educational platform and not a registered tax consultant. We strongly advise consulting a Chartered Accountant (CA) before filing your Income Tax Return.